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Taking Turns

Stories from HIV/AIDS Care Unit 371

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Fear of contagion, isolated patients, a surge of overwhelming and unpreventable deaths, and the frontline healthcare workers who shouldered the responsibility of seeing us through a deadly epidemic: as we continue to confront the global pandemic caused by COVID-19, Taking Turns reminds us that we've been through this before. Only a few decades ago, the world faced another terrifying and deadly health crisis: HIV/AIDS.

Nurse MK Czerwiec began working at the Illinois Masonic Medical Center's HIV/AIDS Care Unit 371 in the 1990s—a pivotal time in the history of AIDS. Deaths from the disease in the United States peaked in 1995 and then dropped drastically in the following years, with the release of effective drug treatments. In this graphic memoir, Czerwiec provides an insider's view of the lives of healthcare workers, patients, and loved ones from Unit 371. With humor, insight, and emotion, MK shows how the patients and staff cared for one another, how the sick faced their deaths, and how the survivors looked for hope in what seemed, at times, like a hopeless situation.

Drawn in a restrained, inviting style, Taking Turns is an open, honest look at suffering, grief, and resilience among a community of medical professionals and patients at the heart of the AIDS epidemic.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 18, 2017
      Czerwiec, a registered nurse and cofounder of Graphic Medicine, weaves together multiple threads of nonfiction narratives in this profound graphic memoir of her early years as a nurse and her formative time working at an HIV/AIDS care unit starting in 1994. Around this central strand of a caregiver’s experience, Czerwiec winds personal stories about patients, facts about the day-to-day job of a nurse, and in-depth medical explanations of HIV/AIDS, its effects on health, its treatments, and much more. In the sudden devastation of the AIDS crisis, the LGBTQ people most affected by it were abandoned to one another’s care. Rather than the usual medical tales of professional-minded strangers treating faceless victims, Czerwiec’s vignettes become about bonding intimately over suffering and death, watching the community be decimated at the same time as mutual nursing was building connections. Some of the pages are heart-wrenching, and the story has the potential to be supremely depressing, but Czerwiec wrings hope from the honesty of her simple, cheerful cartooning style.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from December 2, 2023

      First published in 2017, this memoir carries a new introduction contrasting the 1980s-onset HIV/AIDS epidemic with the recent COVID. In 1993, newly minted nurse Czerwiec (Menopause: A Comic Treatment) finds herself working in Illinois Masonic Medical Center's Unit 371, which provides comprehensive care to their mostly gay men AIDS patients. Heavily staffed, some personnel gay themselves, Unit 371 encourages warm, personal relationships with these stigmatized, mostly terminal patients. Under the mantra of "caring, compassion, competence," pizza from outside, art therapy, and hugging patients all become part of treatment. First surprised but then fully committed to this approach herself, Czerwiec admits, "I thought I'd never find work that was as rewarding." When AIDS drugs improve and the unit closes, Czerwiec begins making comics to express her appreciation--and her sadness that much medical care is not so caring. Her naive-seeming, simply colored figures in spare backgrounds convey the basics of her stories, the way the unit provided the basics of a good life for its patients. VERDICT Czerwiec's wrenching, inspiring story addresses how people should be treated by the medical system and challenges them to treat all patients as in Unit 371. Highly recommended.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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